When offered support from then-President Yeltsin for a bid to lead Russia, Vladimir Putin said 'No,' much to the surprise of his boss. The anecdote was told by the Russian president to school students choosing their path in life.

Putin recalled how he was offered a big career boost that eventually made him president of Russia during a forum on career opportunities for teenagers about to graduate from school. When asked how he chose the profession of the president, he assured them he did not.

The story came with a moral. Putin said that, although he had plenty of experience as an official and "a big boy" by that stage, he didn't feel ready to fill Yeltsin's shoes. He said he hopes young people in the audience will be better prepared for making key decisions in their lives than he had been.

"The first President of Russia, Boris Yeltsin, summoned me and said: 'I want to submit your candidacy to the parliament, so that you become Prime Minister, and later I suggest you run for President. Do you agree?' And I told him: 'No'. He was very surprised and asked in his peculiar manner: 'Why is that?' And I told him: 'I am not ready'"

Putin was handpicked as a potential successor by an ailing Yeltsin in the late 1990s. He had a string of appointments in the presidential administration before becoming head of the FSB in 1998.

A year later Yeltsin used his political influence to push Putin's candidacy through the parliament and confirm him as the new prime minister. On New Year's Eve the president famously resigned in an annual speech to the nation, making Putin his temporary replacement with six months to run an election campaign.

Putin earlier recalled his initial rejection of Yeltsin's offer in an interview with Oliver Stone for a documentary. Speaking to the US filmmaker, the Russian president said his reluctance was to a large degree motivated by fear for his family's safety. With no personal network of support in Moscow, he said a failure in succeeding Yeltsin would have put his wife and two daughters at serious personal risk.

Tuesday's event in Yaroslavl however was devoid of that grim undertone. Putin said a person who wishes to become head of state does not need a specific background, though having knowledge of law, economy or other areas which deal with interconnection of people and institutions, would help.

But those who aspire to reach such lofty heights would have to commit a large portion of his or her life to a very demanding job and would need empathy to judge every decision taken in terms of who it may hurt, Putin said. Being a decent person would be nice as well, he added, although this can be said about any profession.

Comment: For the most part, it is those not fit to be leaders who actually believe themselves worthy and capable of such responsibility.

A man from humble beginnings, a man of the people, and now a leader of the people, that brought his country from the brink of destruction.

And he is demonized throughout the west, hated by MSM media, all because, he has intelligence, moral values, integrity and a social conscience, cannot be corrupted and lives by those values.

Not the values that are highly prized in the western politics, where social values count for nothing, they can easily be bought and sold, and any moral values they had or possessed as individuals, no longer exist, the have sold themselves like Shylock for a pound of flesh.

And that is the EU, they have sold themselves, as leaders and there people for a pound of flesh, Putin would never do that.